For all of you “True Blood” fanatics, you know the relevance of this naked and bloody picture of the show’s actors Alexander Skarsgard, Anna Paquin, and Stephen Moyer. Obviously, there’s blood because the show is about vampires and they’re naked because — well — there’s a lot of sex on the show. What better way to promote the show than to combine both?

Rolling Stone isn’t a stranger to showing a little skin on their magazines (check here for proof). They have featured the likes of The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Christina Aguilera, Janet Jackson Madonna, Cindy Crawford, David Cassidy and even John Lennon in various stages of nakedness:

This disturbingly sexy magazine cover made me reminisce about some of the best naked magazine covers. Of course, my mind immediately went to the famous (and kind of unnecessary) picture of a pregnant Demi Moore on Vanity Fair in 1991 — but that’s been talked about so many times before. Check out the notable “nekid” celebs (some good, some bad) that have graced the cover of fashion and culture magazines after the jump.

Jennifer Aniston appeared naked on the cover of GQ a couple of times. This particular time she wasn’t completely naked. She was wearing a tie.

Beth Ditto decided to show her goodies on the premiere issue of Love magazine.

Bruno (a.k.a. Sacha Baron Cohen), our favorite gay Austrian fashion reporter, appeared naked on the cover of GQ but decided to do it again in Attitude magazine. I didn’t think it would be possible to look more naked, but Bruno managed to accomplish that.

The Dixie Chicks decided to get naked and political on the cover of Entertainment Weekly when they decided to bad mouth our then president, George Bush. How naughty of them.

Tom Ford and his homegirls Scarlett Johansson and Keira Knightley went bare for this 2007 cover of Vanity Fair. I take that back — the girls went bare; Ford decided to stay clothed. I guess he’s just shy.

One of the recent issues of V Magazine included a collection of scratch-off covers to expose the naughty bits of hot models. This is a lottery that everyone can win!

Viva was a magazine in the ’70s that was considered the women’s answer to Penthouse — well, it was actually started by Bob Guccione, the editor of the hot and heavy men’s mag. Needless to say, Viva showed lots of skin — LOTS. Even though it doesn’t exist anymore, it will remain one of the best mags for skintastic pics (the one above is one of the more conservative covers.)